The Americas Cultural Summit 2021
The Americas Cultural Summit 2021 took place online from November 1 to 4, 2021. The event was co-hosted by the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and the International Federation of Arts Councils and Culture Agencies.
The 2021 Summit, the third of its kind, explored the theme “Towards a sustainable, equitable and inclusive future.”
The Summit included participation from the Canada Council for the Arts, namely with opening remarks from former Director and CEO Simon Brault and a plenary and a panel discussion led by Board Chair Jesse Wente.
The 2019 Americas Cultural Summit
The 2019 Americas Cultural Summit took place in Buenos Aires, Argentina, from June 27 to 29, 2019.
The Summit explored the theme of “Cultural Change in a Diverse Territory,” focusing on the profound changes that continue to affect cultural models and practices.
The First Summit (2018)
The First Americas Cultural Summit was hosted by the Canada Council for the Arts in partnership with Argentina’s Ministry of Culture and the International Federation of Arts Councils and Culture Agencies (IFACCA). It was held in Ottawa from May 9 to 11, 2018.
The Summit brought together renowned artists, eminent thinkers and leaders in public arts and culture funding from across the Americas to discuss their role in and impact on the rise of cultural citizenship.
The Summit culminated in a joint call to action that committed delegates to ongoing dialogue, collaboration and exchange. It reflected their shared values and priorities and celebrated the rich diversity that unites the Americas.
Highlights of the 2018 Americas Cultural Summit
Voices of the Summit
Participants shared their views on the Summit.
Summit statistics
Image of Americas Cultural Summit 2018 statistics including discussion themes, gender balance of presenters and delegates, percentage of post-event survey respondents who were motivated to form new collaborations and partnerships, and participation data on the primary language of presenters and types of delegates, as well as countries represented.
Summit themes
Arts and Social Change, Creating Commons for Digital Inclusion, Cultural Rights, Diversity and Inclusion, Indigenous Rights, Participatory Governance, and Truth, Memory and Reconciliation
Participant data (169 delegates)
Delegates | Percentage |
---|---|
Public funder | 46% |
Organization | 17% |
Government | 16% |
Association | 8% |
Artist | 7% |
Academic | 4% |
Private foundation | 2% |
92% of post-event survey respondents were motivated to form new collaborations and partnerships
33 countries represented
Argentina, Australia, Barbados, Belize, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, French Guiana, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Rapa Nui, Solomon Islands, South Africa, Sweden, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, the United Kingdom, Uruguay, and United States of America
Event program
The following question guided the Summit: How can governments, institutions, practitioners, artists and individuals work together to help build more vibrant, open and pluralist democracies that respect, promote and protect the right of everyone to take part in cultural life?
Speakers
Karima Bennoune (USA)
UN Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights Professor of Law and Martin Luther King, Jr. Hall Research Scholar at the University of California-Davis School of Law
Astra Taylor (Canada/USA)
Writer, documentarian and organizer
Alberto Manguel (Argentina/Canada)
Director of the National Library of Argentina and writer
Alonso Salazar J. (Colombia)
Consultant, writer, former mayor of Medellín
Leandro Carvalho (Brazil)
UK Chevening Clore Fellow
Former Secretary of State for Culture, Mato Grosso, Brazil and artist
Jesse Wente (Canada)
Director, Indigenous Screen Office
Mauricio Delfín (Peru)
Researcher and promoter of open government in cultural sectors
Elizabeth Silkes (USA)
Executive Director, International Coalition of Sites of Conscience
Cristóbal Bianchi (Chile)
Artist, editor and founder, Casagrande Art Collective
María Laura Ruggiero (Argentina)
Filmmaker, animator and storyteller
Eliza Chandler (Canada)
Assistant professor, School of Disability Studies, Ryerson University
María Claudia Parias Durán (Colombia)
CEO, Batuta National Foundation
The Honourable María de los Ángeles González (Argentina)
Minister of Innovation and Culture for the Government of the Province of Santa Fe
Rhodnie Désir (Canada)
Choreographer and Artistic Director of RDCreations and Executive Producer of BOW’T TRAIL
Tito Hasbun (Canada-El Salvador)
Consulting Director, Asociación de Arte para el Desarrollo
Amor Muñoz (Mexico)
Artist
Jax Deluca (USA)
Director of Media Arts, National Endowment for the Arts
Michèle Stephenson (Panama/Haiti/Canada/USA)
Filmmaker, artist and author
Taeyoon Choi (USA)
Artist and activist
Angie Leslye Pont Chamorro (Rapa Nui)
Artist, cultural carrier and curator
Kenneth N. Frankel (Canada)
President, Canadian Council for the Americas
The Honourable Olivia Grange, CD, MP (Jamaica)
Minister of Culture, Gender, Entertainment and Sport
Juan Meliá (Mexico)
Executive Secretary, National Fund for Culture and the Arts (FONCA)
Monique Manatch (Canada, Algonquin Nation)
(Canada, Algonquin Nation)
Magdalena Moreno Mujica (Australia)
Executive Director, IFACCA
Simon Brault (Canada)
Director and CEO, Canada Council for the Arts (2014–23)
Carolyn Warren (Canada)
Director General, Arts Granting Programs, Canada Council for the Arts
Martín Inthamoussú (Uruguay)
Artist and cultural manager
Javiera Parada (Chile)
Actress, cultural manager and activist
The Hon. Fernando Griffith (Paraguay)
Minister and Executive Secretary of the National Secretariat of Culture